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Delaware's magnificently preserved first capital,
NEW CASTLE , fronts the broad Delaware River,
just six miles south of Wilmington via Hwy-141. Founded in the
1650s by the Dutch who were intent on expanding from their colony
at New Amsterdam, and taken over by the British in 1664, New Castle
was the main stopping point between Baltimore and Philadelphia.
William Penn first set foot in the New World here in October 1682.
Largely bypassed when railroads and highways replaced the riverboats,
it has managed to survive intact, its quiet cobbled streets and
immaculate eighteenth-century brick houses shaded by ancient hardwood
trees.
The heart of New Castle is the tree-filled
town green that spreads east from the shops of Delaware
Street. Laid out in 1655 by Peter Stuyvesant, and ringed by a
cracked red-brick sidewalk, it is dominated by the stalwart tower
of the Immanuel Episcopal Church, built in 1703 and bordered by
tidy rows of two-hundred-year-old gravestones. The church's modern,
pristine white interior was reconstructed after a disastrous fire
in the 1980s. On the west edge of the green, the Old Court
House (TuesSat 10am3.30pm, Sun 1.304.30pm; free) was
built in 1732 and served as the first state capitol. Its dainty
cupola was the centerpoint from which surveyors determined the
state's curved northern border, drawn up when Delaware seceded
from Pennsylvania in 1776.
Fine colonial houses fill the few blocks around
the town green. The largest, and only one regularly open to the
public, is the George Read II House (TuesSat
10am4pm, Sun noon4pm; $4), two blocks south along the river at
42 The Strand. Built between 1797 and 1804 for a signatory of
the Declaration of Independence, the original house burned down
in 1824. The sumptuously detailed rebuilt version holds marble
fireplaces, brightly painted walls, elaborately carved woodwork
and some of the finest plasterwork ornamentation of the Federal
period. The spacious gardens behind the building were laid out
in 1847 to the picturesque designs of Andrew Jackson Downing.
The large houses across the street, backing onto the Delaware
River, also date from the early nineteenth century, and many are
now run as B&Bs. A large riverfront park spreads south from
the foot of Delaware Street, with rolling lawns and sheltered
benches. Its pride and joy is a tiny white-clapboard ticket office,
which dates from the opening of the town's first railroad in 1832
and stands next to a small piece of track.